The new UnitedHealthcare Healthy PregnancySM mobile app, an interactive program providing expectant women with personalized content and 24/7 nurse support during pregnancy and after delivery, is now available to people enrolled in most UnitedHealthcare employer-sponsored plans*. Employers can offer the UnitedHealthcare Healthy Pregnancy mobile app to their employees at no additional cost as part of their benefit plan. The app provides important prenatal and postnatal resources for expectant parents in an easy-to-use format.

People eligible for the UnitedHealthcare Healthy Pregnancy program can download the app onto their iPhone® and Android® devices. The app offers personalized features and pregnancy-related information, and integrates with UnitedHealthcare’s maternity care platform as another way to connect with maternity nurse support throughout the prenatal and postnatal phases.

“The UnitedHealthcare Healthy Pregnancy mobile app is an innovative resource for expectant parents to help manage their pregnancy,” said Sam Ho, M.D., chief medical officer of UnitedHealthcare. “Mobile devices are changing how consumers access the health system, which may make it easier and more convenient for people to help improve their health and the health of their family members.”

The app includes the ability to:

connect with a registered nurse 24/7 for support and information, and access health care cost estimates and plan benefit information;

monitor and track weight, set reminders to take vitamins, track appointments and events;

take a health assessment and discuss the results with a nurse; and

receive customized weekly updates based on the baby’s gestational age, search for information about pregnancy symptoms and concerns, and use a “kick counter” to track the baby’s movements.

A new UnitedHealthcare study found that 73 percent of women underestimate the duration of a full-term delivery, defined as 39 weeks of pregnancy by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Nearly 60 percent of the women surveyed thought a pregnancy was full-term at 36 weeks (exactly nine months), and 15 percent thought full-term meant 37 weeks to 38 weeks. Twenty percent correctly recognized that a full-term pregnancy occurs at 39 weeks (nearly 10 months).

More than 80 percent of women who have or would become pregnant said they are prepared to have a full-term, healthy pregnancy and delivery; however, there were some misperceptions around the potential health risks associated with early, elective cesarean-section deliveries before 39 weeks of gestation. Studies have shown that early, non-medically indicated C-sections are linked to a higher risk of complication and admission to the neonatal intensive care unit, but 31 percent of respondents said such procedures would have no impact on a baby’s health.